Clark v. Freeling

120 S.W.2d 375, 196 Ark. 907, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 17, 1938
Docket4-5099
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 375 (Clark v. Freeling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Freeling, 120 S.W.2d 375, 196 Ark. 907, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 285 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

McHaney, J.

Counsel for appellants have correctly stated the question for consideration by this court as follows: “The question before the court on this appeal is the validity of certain mutual certificates issued by the Mutual Loan & Investment Company which is now in the process of liquidation under a state receivership. The certificates were issued by the loan company about sis months prior to its receivership, to one C. R. Prunty, who thereafter assigned them to Freeling and others, appellees on this appeal.

“The Mutual Loan & Investment Company was placed in the hands of a receiver by order of the Pulaski chancery court on January 10, 1936, upon application of the State Bank Commissioner.
“Freeling and others filed claims against the loan company in the receivership proceedings based upon the certificates which they obtained from Prunty. W. B. Clark and others, creditors of the loan company, who are appellants on this appeal, intervened in the receivership proceedings to contest the claims of Freeling and others, based on these certificates, contending that the certificates were not legal obligations of the loan company, and Freeling and others, who held them by assignment, were not bona fide creditors.
“Freeling and others responded, denying the allegations of Clark and others, interveners.
“The chancery court held that the certificates, of the loan company issued to Prunty and by him assigned to Freeling and others were void for want of consideration, but that Clark and others, as creditors, stood in the shoes of the loan company and its receiver, and as such were estopped from challenging the validity of the certificates because of certain representations made by Virgil Pettie, president, and G-uy W. Eoss, secretary, of the loan company, to the effect that the certificates would be paid when due. From this decree Clark and others have appealed as against Freeling and others.
“After the issues were made up between these appellants and appellees and all the testimony as to them had been taken, the Pyramid Life Insurance Company, assignee of one of the certificates originally issued to Prunty, and whose rights under the certificate had been contested by Clark and others as above set out, filed ¿ supplemental response and cross-complaint against Prunty and his wife. In this pleading the' Pyramid Life Insurance Company joined Prunty and wife as parties to the suit. It charged fraud on the part of Prunty in the procurement of certain life insurance from it for which it accepted the certificates in question, and prayed that the insurance policies which it had issued to Prunty in exchange for the certificate assigned to it by Prunty be cancelled and declared invalid and surrendered up, along with certain premium receipts issued by it to Prunty, and that it have a money judgment' against Prunty for the amount of two annual premiums, which would cover the risk which it had assumed and the two-year period during which the policy had been kept in force. '
“Prunty and wife answered and denied the allegations of the cross-complaint and prayed that the suit of the life insurance company against them be dismissed.
“On this phase of the case the lower court held that the loan company certificates issued to Prunty and by him assigned to the life insurance • company were also void because issued without consideration, and accordingly granted the relief prayed by the Pyramid company and cancelled the insurance' policies which it had issued to Prunty.
“Prunty and wife have appealed on the issues as made up between them and the insurance company, and are, therefore, appellants as to the insurance company.
“Clark and others as creditors and interveners did not participate in the proceedings between Prunty and wife and the insurance company.”

The Mutual Loan & Investment company was an Arkansas-corporation, with rather broad powers authorizing it to lend and borrow money and “to issue bonds, debentures or obligations of this corporation from time to time for any of the objects or purposes of this corporation and to secure the same by mortgage, pledge, deed of trust or otherwise.” It had an authorized capital stock of $150,000, but only approximately $101,000 of same was sold. It began business in December, 1929, and from then until 1932, it made small loans of from $100 to $300, but in February of 1932, it loaned appellant Prunty $2,000, and in June of said year it loaned one Dr. J. A. Tiller $6,000. In 1935, it loaned said Tiller and son $35,000, which was afterwards paid by issuance to it of stock in the Watson Rubber Stem Tube Company, a corporation, of the par value of $61,500 and which was later surrendered to the Watson Company for a patent right to what was called the Even-Flo Safety Tank and a selling right to another device called Gwynn Vulcanizer. These devices or patents were not readily, or at all, convertible into cash and the financial condition of the Mutual Company was becoming very acute. Prunty was employed to dispose of them. He fell upon the happy thought, whether original or otherwise, of organizing a corporation in Illinois to engage in the coal mining business, which would purchase said devices or assets of the Mutual, and pay for same with its. promissory notes. So the Gulf Fuel & Mining Company was organized with a capital stock of 20,000 shares of which the Mutual Company got 31,000 shares, and it purchased from the Mutual said devices for $150,000, executing its notes therefor, of which the Mutual received $61,500 in notes and Prunty received $88,500 in notes. Prunty then traded $30,000 of his Gulf notes to the Mutual for $30,000 of its bonds or full paid certificates which bore interest at 7 per cent, per annum and payable in the future. Prunty thereafter sold some of these certificates to appellees who, before purchasing, were assured by the president and secretary of the Mutual Company that said certificates were the valid and binding obligations of said company, and would be paid when due.

Appellee, Pyramid Life Insurance Company, received $1,500 face value of said certificates from Prunty and issued to him four life insurance policies for $5,000 each, the annual premiums thereon amounting to $680.40, for said certificates. The agent negotiating this deal being authorized for this particular transaction and no other.

Under this state of the record the trial court held that the certificates issued by the Mutual Company to Prunty and by him assigned to appellees, Freeling et al., were without consideration and invalid, but that appellants stood in the shoes of the Mutual Company and its receiver, and as such, were estopped from asserting their invalidity because of the representations made by its president and secretary to appellees. From this decree appellants, Clark, et al., have appealed as against Freeling et al. As to the appellee, Pyramid Life Insurance Company, the court likewise held the certificates invalid, granted the relief prayed by it, including a cancellation of said policies to Prunty. Prunty and wife, she being the beneficiary in said policies, have appealed on this phase of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 375, 196 Ark. 907, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-freeling-ark-1938.